lang: en
Summary
Tenant organizing is the practice of building collective power among renters of a building, block, or city to negotiate with landlords, press for repairs, fight displacement, and (in extreme cases) strike rent. The dominant urban-community-organizing form in the 2020s.
Body
Tenant organizing has three layers: the building (a tenants’ association in a single building), the block or neighborhood (a tenants’ union or rent-strike committee across multiple buildings), and the city (a tenant federation or movement that presses for policy change — rent control, just-cause eviction, social housing). The Tenants Association Handbook walks through the building-level version: house meeting, committee formation, demand, presentation to landlord, escalation [source: tenant-union-handbook]. The German Organizing-Handbuch für Mieterinnen und Mieter adds the legal-reminder-card step, where the committee presents a written demand alongside a card summarizing the relevant BGB tenancy-law sections, so the landlord knows the committee has read the law [source: organizing-handbuch-mieter]. The French Guide pratique d’occupation extends the model to the most-escalated form — the squat / building occupation, with a 24-hour welcome rota, a legal reference card (loi DALO), and a press-contact protocol [source: dal-occupation-guide].
The Commons Library’s people-power framework names the building-organization step as the “structure test” of tenant power: if you can fill a room and run a clean meeting, you have the capacity to escalate [source: commons-library]. The mature tenant association uses the same relational-organizing cycle as any other community-organizing campaign: one-to-ones to build the committee, mapping the building, a structured demand, a deadline, an escalation if the deadline is missed.
The failure modes are: (1) stopping at the demand without preparing escalation (landlords learn to ignore written demands); (2) failing to win the small wins first (a broken-elevator repair, a heat restoration) before the big fight (a rent strike); (3) leadership burn-out because the same 3 tenants carry every meeting. Tenant unions solve the third by deliberately running a leadership-development track, the same one-to-one → committee-member → committee-chair ladder that broad-based organizing uses.
Use it for
Starting a building or block-level tenant association; drafting a collective demand letter; preparing for a rent strike; understanding the German or French tenancy-law framework for collective action.
Worked examples
- sindicato-inquilinas — Madrid Tenants’ Union
- berlin-mietenvolksentscheid — Berlin rent referendum
Related
- rent-strikes
- one-to-ones
- power-mapping
- broad-based-organizing
- relational-organizing
- tenant-union-handbook
- organizing-handbuch-mieter
- dal-occupation-guide
Open Questions
- How do tenant unions in the Global South (South Africa, Brazil) frame the landlord relationship in contexts of informal housing?
Sources & verification
- tenant-union-handbook — grounding: secondary
- organizing-handbuch-mieter — grounding: secondary
- dal-occupation-guide — grounding: secondary
- commons-library — grounding: secondary
Verified 2026-07-01 by llm-qc.